A GEORGE IV MAHOGANY DOUBLE-SIDED LOW BOOKCASE
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A GEORGE IV MAHOGANY DOUBLE-SIDED LOW BOOKCASE

CIRCA 1825

Details
A GEORGE IV MAHOGANY DOUBLE-SIDED LOW BOOKCASE
CIRCA 1825
The rectangular top above a pair of panelled doors on one side, enclosing four graduated cedar-lined drawers on the left and an adjustable shelf on the right, the other side with two open compartments enclosing two adjustable shelves each, the corners with free-standing columns, on a rectangular moulded plinth and sunk castors
29¼ in. (74.5 cm.) high; 56 in. (142.5 cm.) wide; 21¼ in. (54 cm.) deep
Provenance
The Bishop's Palace, Exeter.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

The library-cabinet, with its 'Grecian' plinth and 'Pompeian' columnar corners, is designed in the antique style popularised by C. Percier and P.F.L. Fontaine's, Receuil de Décorations Interieures, 1801 (2nd ed. 1812). R. Ackermann described this French style as 'exquisitely perfected by M. Persee, the French architect to Buonaparte' when he published a desk design from the Receuil in his Repository of Arts, 1822. In 1812 Ackermann had included a French fashioned design for a related 'dwarf book and folio case, suitable to a library, and ornamented with 'Persic pillars'. (P. Agius, Ackermann's Regency Furniture and Interiors, London, 1984, pl. 45).
The present cabinet may have been acquired by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners for the Bishop's Palace, Exeter, following the alterations carried out at the Palace in the second decade of the 19th century (J. Musson, 'The Palace, Exeter', Country Life, 19 March 1998, pp. 44-7).

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